Sounds to me like the post-mint damage includes a good whizzing with a wire brush in an electric drill.
I like the method suggested in the last part of krispy's link: So - Cut out a piece containing the coinFreeze itPerhaps add to the blanket a few...
The big Osaka show I attended was in October, but I'll email my acquaintance there who took me to that show, and see if there is anything planned...
Acetone melts some plastics. If it works on your seat, it won't harm the coins.
And the second one is a Panama dime. The Japanese coin is a silver ¥100 dated Showa 31 (1956) - the first year of that design.
How long have you been an owner and/or employee?
Substitute 99.99+% of all specific coins for "this coin", and the answer will still be a resounding "No!" Coins are not a viable investment...
The moderators really should either close this thread or move it to PRWE where conspiracy theory discussion belongs.
Of course you've done the research, so why don't you share it with us poor boobs who don't take you word as gospel? Just tell us the Executive...
This belongs in the PRWE forum, not here.
So how come we never see a partial missing clad, where the planchet is punched from the transition area?
Here are the basics: Open an Excel file and enter column headings across the page for the information you want to keep, such as denomination,...
Definitely. IMHO Mike Byers and Fred Weinberg are the top two error dealers out there, so I would send a picture and the actual specifications to...
Just don't dump your existing Excell worksheet until you have played around with the new software enough to know whether you want to make a...
Craigs list? By comparison eBay is fraud-free.
The answer has been posted in your other thread asking the same question.
Carefully compare the pattern of stars on the epaulet of both pictures. That's one area the Chinese counterfeiters almost always screw up.
Couldn't have phrased it better myself.
Yet. [IMG]
The primary tests are weight and thickness. A "complete" clad quarter will weigh 5.67g, and will measure ~1-3/4mm. (Plating typically won't add...
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